Redolent in a sentence as an adjective

It's more like saying a young chef's early life was redolent with, say, Tuscan food.

It's redolent of the complaints when Twitter etc limit their API/number of tokens per app etc.

That's the only way to proceed that's respectful of users and not redolent of the stench of malware.

" There are those trying to right it and treat it like it is actually science and rip out all the pseudo-bs that psych is redolent with.

The HN comments are not always faultless, but they are reliably redolent of authority.

It just hangs there, a visibly stinking, redolent horror invading everyone else's nostrils.

It is like saying a young chef's early life was redolent with food, or that a young interior decorator was born into a home filled with furniture.

I don't think that leads to sensible conclusions, and it's redolent of after-the-fact justification.

This current era is redolent of the dying embers of the dot com boom - over leveraged loss makers trying to go public to pay back vast sums of borrowing from investors

I’d bet that drop-off is precisely because it’s seen as a very common old-fashioned name redolent of pre-90s world which modern Ireland has a very complex relationship with.

Certainly it is in no way redolent of, for example, someone who bravely defies his ignorance in order to declaim at length on a subject of which he has absolutely no relevant experience whatsoever.

Suddenly, corporations that had previously considered open source to be dangerously redolent of “communism” were starting to see its value, both as a way of building software and as a recruitment tactic.

And this release of emails right before the Copenhagen conference is just another salvo—and a highly effective one—in that public relations battle, redolent with the scent of the same flaks and hacks who brought you "smoking isn't dangerous.

I'd like to know what the condition of these people is:"At least 120,000 members of China’s Muslim Uighur minority have been confined to political “re-education camps” redolent of the Mao era that are springing up across the country’s western borderlands, a report has claimed.

Redolent definitions

adjective

serving to bring to mind; "cannot forbear to close on this redolent literary note"- Wilder Hobson; "a campaign redolent of machine politics"

See also: evocative remindful reminiscent resonant

adjective

(used with `of' or `with') noticeably odorous; "the hall was redolent of floor wax"; "air redolent with the fumes of beer and whiskey"

adjective

having a strong pleasant odor; "the pine woods were more redolent"- Jean Stafford

See also: aromatic